Section No. 03 · Who's Reading This
Six roles · Six reasons · One product line
Use cases · Six roles, one product

The roles who already have an answer when the CMO asks.

Marketing leaders use it to brief the board. Brand managers use it to catch the line that quietly broke. Founders use it before fundraising. Agencies use it to keep retainers honest. Six audiences, six reasons. The product is the same — the report you bring to the meeting is what changes.

6roles
4AI models per scan
~90sto your first result
1shared dashboard
By role · Pick the one that sounds like you

Six readers. One product.

Each row links to a deeper page that walks through the specific report they get, the metric they bring to the meeting, and the version of the product they end up paying for. Skim the cards first; click in when one looks like you.

01 / RoleCMO bench
Marketing leaders

"The metric you'd actually put in front of the board."

A single accuracy number, a delta from last month, and a one-sentence summary you can paste into the deck.

  • ·Monthly executive PDF, automated
  • ·Trend dashboard for QBRs
  • ·Drift alerts when a claim flips
Most start at Monitor StandardRead the page →
02 / RoleDay-to-day
Brand managers

For the person who notices the quiet line that broke.

Per-claim accuracy with source verification — so you can show the team exactly which sentence on the site needs editing.

  • ·Per-claim accuracy with citations
  • ·Correction playbook, ranked by impact
  • ·Workflow for getting fixes into copy
Start with the $199 reportRead the page →
03 / RoleComms desk
PR & comms

Catch the misquote before a reporter does.

When a journalist asks Perplexity about your company, you want to know what answer they got — before the article runs.

  • ·Source-cited model responses
  • ·Reporter-ready accuracy briefing
  • ·Talking points for the next interview
Monitor Pro, weekly cadenceRead the page →
04 / RoleFundraise mode
Founders

What an LP hears when they ask ChatGPT about your company.

Before the partner meeting. Before the diligence call. Before the press tour. Find out what the room already thinks they know.

  • ·Fundraise-mode scan, full diligence
  • ·Investor-grade PDF with the worst finding called out
  • ·Per-model reliability — which AI gets you right
$199 report, one-timeRead the page →
05 / RoleComing soon
Agencies

A new retainer line your clients can't get anywhere else.

Resell AI brand monitoring under your agency's banner. White-label portal, your logo, your URL, your invoice.

  • ·White-label dashboard and PDF reports
  • ·Up to 25 client brands per seat
  • ·$2,499/mo intro pricing, locked for life
Agency portal · early accessRead the page →
06 / RolePortfolio
Enterprise & holdcos

Ten brands. One subscription. One invoice.

Apex Holdings runs Acme Robotics, Tinsel Market, Stride Coffee, and seven others on the same misquoted dashboard.

  • ·10-brand bundle, $1,999–2,999/mo
  • ·One dashboard, per-brand drift alerts
  • ·SSO, data export, named CSM
Multi-brand bundlesRead the page →

By industry — where AI gets you wrong changes.

Different categories have different failure modes. SaaS gets the pricing wrong. D2C gets the return policy wrong. Healthcare gets the indication wrong. We tune the question set to the failure mode that matters for you.

B2B SaaS
Pricing · integrations · changelog

The pricing page is the most-asked question. The model invents the wrong tier roughly half the time.

→ BluePeak SaaS pattern
D2C / retail
Returns · shipping · stock

Models confidently quote return windows that haven't been true since 2023. Refund-policy drift is the canonical failure.

→ Tinsel Market pattern
Hardware
Specs · compatibility · safety

"Does it work with X?" gets a confident yes about a product that was discontinued. Spec-sheet hallucination is constant.

→ Acme Robotics pattern
Professional services
Practice areas · team · pricing

Models invent partners who left in 2019 and quote billing rates from someone else's firm. Bio drift is the failure.

→ Harbor Studio pattern
A scene from the Monday standup

The CMO opens her laptop. The email is already there.

Most of the use cases on this page collapse into one moment: the email that landed at 6:04 a.m. on the first Monday of the month, while the rest of the team was still in transit.

It's a paragraph, a number, and a button. By 9:00 a.m. the brand manager has the playbook open and someone is editing copy. By 9:30 the team has moved on. This is what monitoring is supposed to feel like.

The Monday email lands at 6:04 a.m. AI Readiness Score: 71. Up two from last month. A line at the top: "ChatGPT now correctly cites your enterprise pricing." A line below it: "Gemini still hallucinates a 60-day return window. The actual is 30."

By the time the CMO reaches her desk at 8:40, the brand manager has already filed the playbook ticket — the canonical "30-day returns, period, no exceptions" sentence pinned to the product page footer. By 9:30 the team has moved on. Nobody had to argue about whether to fix it. The email did the work.

6:04 a.m. · The Monday after a re-scan

By the time the same email lands the following month, the score is 76. The Gemini line is gone from the worst-finding section. A new line has replaced it: "Perplexity is asked about your competitor 40% more often than last month." The next thing to fix is already named. Nobody is surprised.

We used to talk about AI in marketing strategy meetings. Now AI is a row on the marketing dashboard. That's the upgrade.
VP Marketing · B2B SaaS, $40M ARR · misquoted customer since February 2026

Bring an answer, not a guess.

Run a free scan for your brand. Ninety seconds. You'll know which role above sounds most like the version of you who'll be reading the report.